In manufacturing, everybody is focusing on delivering customer value and eliminating all of the processes that don't add value. That, to me, is what regulation should be about: delivering the outcomes—the health, safety, environmental performance—and doing that in the least costly, the least complicated way possible. It's removing all of the complicated compliance requirements that don't add anything to the outcomes.
I'm amazed. When I go into a room of business people and I ask how many have a NEXUS card, a lot of hands go up. Then I ask how many people who have a NEXUS card have been drawn into secondary inspection. It's amazing how many hands go up. The reason is because inspectors in the United States are now inspecting to see if you're compliant with NEXUS, with a system that is supposed to speed up because you have security clearance.
In my mind, that's a perfect example. Why do we need this? It's not adding to greater security here; it's simply putting in place another set of compliance requirements that are totally unnecessary. It's apparent in many, many other areas of regulation, and that's exactly the type of thing we should be looking to eliminate.